Donald Trump, on very first day of his administration, is promoting fake facts. If he doesn’t like actually reality, he and his advisers KellyAnne Conway and Sean Spicer just make up their own ‘alternative facts.’ When KellyAnne revealed this on Jan. 22, the internet went into a frenzy. See their angry reactions, right here!

Things got heated between Kellyanne Conway and Meet The Press‘s Chuck Todd on Jan. 22. One of President Trump’s top advisors got into a dispute with the NBC news host over White House press secretary Sean Spicer‘s remarks regarding the size of the crowds at the President’s inauguration on Friday, Jan. 20. Kellyanne defended the press secretary’s statements and her chosen phrase led to Twitter’s latest hashtag trend.

1.8 million people attended President Obama’s inauguration in 2009, according to CBS News. Donald Trump believed there to be approximately a million people at his swearing-in ceremony. “Honestly it looked like a million and a half people, whatever it was, it was. But it went all the way back to the Washington monument,” he said while at CIA Headquarters in Virginia, The Independent reported. Unofficial estimates place the crowd size at Trump’s inauguration around 250,000 people.

“There is a scientific explanation why the crowd size must have appeared to Trump in 2017 similar or even larger than to Obama in 2009,” Mr. Altenburg, a crowd scientist from Manchester Metropolitan University in Britain told The New York Times. The scientists said President Trump most likely had a good view of the crowded front third, but would not be able to see the more sparsely packed back two thirds. They also estimated the Women’s March on Jan. 21 was approximately three times as crowded as the inauguration the day before. They placed around “160,000 people” at the National Mall in the hour leading up to the President’s inaugural address whereas “at least 470,000 people,” were on the Mall by 2 p.m. for the march.

Twitter went nuts over Kellyanne’s “alternative facts.” People could not believe that the Trump advisor seriously thought what she said made sense. “Can a term be more oxymoronic than ‘alternative facts’?” one user wrote. A Twitter user joked, “I speak 4 languages, play classical piano and starred as Annie on Broadway.” Read more hilarious and outraged reactions below.

Other users applied “alternative facts” to their own lives. “As a teacher,” one tweet read, “I would not accept alternative facts on an exam or in a historical essay. I’m hoping that, as citizens, we won’t either.” Another tweet poked fun at the World Series winning Chicago Cubs team. “Sorry Cubs, you didn’t win. Your World Series drought is still going strong.”

As a teacher, I would not accept "#alternativefacts" on an exam or in a historical essay. I'm hoping that, as citizens, we won't either.

SNL also took a shot at Kellyanne in their Jan. 21 show. Kate McKinnon dressed up as the Trump’s advisor. She performed the “Roxie (the Name on Everyone’s Lips)” number from the famous Broadway musical and movie Chicago. Renee Zellweger played Roxie in the film and the sketch closely mirrors the flashy 20s song.

HollywoodLifers, what do you think of the Internet’s response to Kellyanne’s interview? Sound off in the comments below!